Abbas, born in the Arab-Jewish town of Zefat, fled with his family to Syria during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. Despite the family’s refugee status, Abbas earned a law degree from the University of Damascus. In the late 1950s Abbas was one of the founders of Fatah, which spearheaded the Palestinian armed struggle and came to dominate the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). As head of the PLO’s international department in the late 1970s, Abbas was instrumental in forging contacts with Israeli peace groups. In 1982 Abbas was awarded a doctorate in history from Moscow State University; his dissertation, which examined Nazism and Zionism, later was decried by Jewish groups as a work of Holocaust denial, and in the 1990s he distanced himself from some of its more controversial elements.

In the early 1990s Abbas shaped Palestinian negotiating strategy at both the peace conference in Madrid (1991) and in secret meetings with the Israelis in Norway. Through the resulting Oslo Accords (1993), Israel and the Palestinians extended mutual recognition to each other, and Israel ceded some governing functions in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to a Palestinian Authority. Abbas was a senior member of the Palestinian delegation to the Camp Davidpeace talks in July 2000; he adamantly rejected Israel’s peace offer but opposed the violent Palestinian uprising called the intifāḍah (Arabic: “shaking off”) that followed. In 2003, after intense international pressure, Abbas was installed as Palestinian prime minister as an effort to circumventArafat, who was considered an impediment to peace by Israel and the United States. Abbas quickly renounced terrorism, called for an end to the intifāḍah against Israel, and resolved to create a single Palestinian armed force, but he soon resigned from office, claiming he had been undermined by Israel, the United States, and Arafat.

Following Arafat’s death in November 2004, Abbas was named head of the PLO. In January 2005 he easily won the election to succeed Arafat as president of the Palestinian Authority, garnering more than 60 percent of the vote. Abbas was forced to confront deep divisions within the Palestinian Authority in 2006 after candidates backed by Hamas, a militant Islamic party, won a majority of seats in legislative elections. A short-lived Fatah-Hamas coalition government gave way to violence, and in 2007 Hamas established exclusive control in the Gaza Strip.

Abbas participated in direct peace talks with Israel in 2010. However, the talks quickly came to a halt over the construction of Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Following the talks’ failure, Abbas shifted his efforts toward gaining international recognition for a Palestinian state. In September 2011 Abbas submitted a request to the United Nations Security Council asking for the admission of an independent Palestinian state to the United Nations. The action—which was opposed by Israel and the United States—had become necessary, he argued, because the U.S.-mediated peace negotiations had placed too little pressure on Israel to make concessions for peace.

In May 2011 Hamas and Fatah had signed a reconciliation agreement calling for the formation of an interim government to organize legislative and presidential elections in 2012. After months of negotiations over the leadership of the interim government, the two parties announced in February 2012 that they had selected Abbas for the post of interim prime minister.

A year after the failure of the Palestinian bid for full membership in the UN, Abbas announced that he would seek the UN General Assembly’s implicit recognition of Palestinian statehood by submitting a draft resolution to the UN General Assembly requesting that the status of the Palestinian mission to the UN (officially called Palestine within the UN) be upgraded from “permanent observer” to “nonmember observer state.” The designation, while falling short of full UN membership, would allow Palestinians to seek membership in international bodies such as the International Criminal Court. The resolution passed on November 29, 2012, with 138 countries in favour, 9 opposed, and 41 abstentions. The resolution also urged Israel and the Palestinians to resume stalled negotiations toward a two-state solution. Israeli officials opposed Abbas’s bid for recognition, saying that such unilateral actions by the Palestinians would hold up negotiations with Israel.

In September 2015 Abbas announced in a speech to the UN General Assembly that Palestinians were no longer bound by the Oslo Accords, which he accused Israel of repeatedly violating. The practical effects of his declaration remained unclear, however, since he stopped short of naming specific actions to be taken, such as dissolving the Palestinian Authority or ending security coordination with Israel.

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Mahmoud Abbas is a Palestinian leader. He is also known as Abu Mazen. Abbas became the first prime minister of the Palestinian Authority in 2003. In 2005 he was elected president of the Palestinian Authority.

(born 1935). Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas was one of the cofounders of Fatah, which became the main arm of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). He was also the first prime minister of the Palestinian Authority (PA)-the governing body of the emerging Palestinian autonomous regions-serving for about four months in 2003. After Yasir ’Arafat died in 2004, Abbas replaced him as chairman of the PLO and, in 2005, as president of the PA.